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Malleus Maleficarum Part 2
Chapter XV
How they Raise and Stir up Hailstorms and Tempests, and Cause Lightning to Blast both Men and Beasts.
That devils and their disciples can by witchcraft cause lightnings and
hailstorms and tempests, and that the devils have power from God to do this,
and their disciples do so with God's permission, is proved by Holy Scripture
in Job i and ii. For the devil received power from God, and
immediately caused it to happen that the Sabeans took away from Job fifty
yoke of oxen and five hundred asses, and then fire came from heaven and
consumed seven thousand camels, and a great wind came and smote down this
house, killing his seven sons and his three daughters, and all the young
men, that is to say, the servants, except him who brought the news, were
killed; and finally the devil smote the body of the holy man with the most
terrible sores, and caused his wife and his three friends to vex him
grievously.
S. Thomas in his commentary on Job says as follows: It must be confessed
that, with God's permission, the devils can disturb the air, raise up winds,
and make the fire fall from heaven. For although, in the matter of taking
various shapes, corporeal nature is not at the command of any Angel, either
good or bad, but only at that of God the Creator, yet in the matter of local
motion corporeal nature has to obey the spiritual nature. And this truth is
clearly exemplified in man himself; for at the mere command of the will,
which exists subjectively in the soul, the limbs are moved to perform that
which they have been willed to do. Therefore whatever can be accomplished
by mere local motion, this not only good but bad spirits can by their
natural power accomplish, unless God should forbid it. But winds and rain
and other similar disturbances of the air can be caused by the mere movement
of vapours released from the earth or the water; therefore the natural
power of devils is sufficient to cause such things. So says S. Thomas.
For God in His justice using the devils as his agents of punishment inflicts
the evils which come to us who live in this world. Therefore, with reference
to that in the Psalms: He called a famine on the land, and wasted all
their substance of bread.; the gloss says: God allowed this evil to
be caused by the bad Angels who are in charge of such matters; and by famine
is meant the Angel in charge of famine.
We refer the reader also to what has been written above on the question as
to whether witches must always have the devil's help to aid them in their
works, and concerning the three kinds of harm which the devils at times
inflict without the agency of a witch. But the devils are more eager to
injure men with the help of a witch, since in this way God is the more
offended, and greater power is given to them to torment and punish.
And relevant to this subject is what the Doctors have written in the
Second book of Sentences, dist. 6, on the question whether there is
a special place assigned to the bad Angels in the clouds of the air. For in
devils there are three things to be considered - their nature, their duty
and their sin; and by nature they belong to the empyrean of heaven, through
sin to the lower hell, but by reason of the duty assigned to them, as we
have said, as ministers of punishment to the wicked and trial to the good,
their place is in the clouds of the air. For they do not dwell here with us
on the earth lest they should plague us too much; but in the air and around
the fiery sphere they can so bring together the active and passive agents
that, when God permits, they can bring down fire and lightning from heaven.
A story is told in the Formicarius of
a certain man who had been taken, and was asked by the judge how they went
about to raise up hailstorms and tempests, and whether it was easy for them
to do so. He answered: We can easily cause hailstorms, but we cannot do all
the harm that we wish, because of the guardianship of good Angels. And he
added: We can only injure those who are deprived of God's help; but we
cannot hurt those who make the sign of the Cross. And this is how we got to
work: first we use certain words in the fields to implore the chief of the
devils to send one of his servants to strike the man whom we name. Then,
when the devil has come, we sacrifice to him a black cock at two
cross-roads, throwing it up into the air; and
when the devil has received this, he performs our wish and stirs up the air,
but not always in the places which we have named, and, according to the
permission of the living God, sends down hailstorms and lightnings.
In the same work we hear of a certain leader or heresiarch of witches named
Staufer, who lived in Berne and the adjacent
country, and used publicly to boast that, whenever he liked, he could change
himself into a mouse in the sight of his rivals and slip through the hands
of his deadly enemies; and that he had often escaped from the hands of his
mortal foes in this manner. But when the Divine justice wished to put an end
to his wickedness, some of his enemies lay in wait for him cautiously and
saw him sitting in a basket near a window, and suddenly pierced him through
with swords and spears, so that he miserably died for his crimes. Yet he
left behind him a disciple, named Hoppo, who had also for his master that
Stadlin whom we have mentioned before in the sixth chapter.
These two could, whenever they pleased, cause the third part of the manure
or straw or corn to pass invisibly from a neighbour's field to their own;
they could raise the most violent hailstorms and destructive winds and
lightning; could cast into the water in the sight of their parents children
walking by the water-side, when there was no one else in sight; could cause
barrenness in men and animals; could reveal hidden things to others; could
in many ways injure men in their affairs or their bodies; could at times
kill whom they would by lightning; and could cause many other plagues, when
and where the justice of God permitted such things to be done.
It is better to add an instance which came within our own experience. For in
the diocese of Constance, twenty-eight German miles from the town of
Ratisbon in the direction of Salzburg, a violent hailstorm destroyed all the
fruit, crops and vineyards in a belt one mile wide, so that the vines hardly
bore fruit for three years. This was brought to the notice of the
Inquisition, since the people clamoured for an inquiry to be held; many
beside all the townsmen being of the opinion that it was caused by
witchcraft. Accordingly it was agreed after fifteen days' formal
deliberation that it was a case of witchcraft for us to consider; and among
a large number of suspects, we particularly examined two women, one named
Agnes, a bath-woman, and the other Anna von Mindelheim. These two were taken
and shut up separately in different prisons, neither of them knowing in the
least what had happened to the other. On the following day the bath-woman
was very gently questioned in the presence of a notary by the chief
magistrate, a justice named Gelre very zealous for the Faith, and by the
other magistrates with him; and although she was undoubtedly well provided
with that evil gift of silence which is the constant bane of judges, and at
the first trial affirmed that she was innocent of any crime against man or
woman; yet, in the Divine mercy that so great a crime should not pass
unpunished, suddenly, when she had been freed from her chains, although it
was in the torture chamber, she fully laid bare all the crimes which she
had committed. For when she was questioned by the Notary of the Inquisition
upon the accusations which had been brought against her of harm done to men
and cattle, by reason of which she had been gravely suspected of being a
witch, although there had been no witness to prove that she had abjured the
Faith or performed coitus with an Incubus devil (for she had been most
secret); nevertheless, after she had confessed to the harm which she had
caused to animals and men, she acknowledged also all that she was asked
concerning the abjuration of the Faith, and copulation committed with an
Incubus devil; saying that for more than eighteen years she had given her
body to an Incubus devil, with a complete abnegation of the Faith.
After this she was asked whether she knew anything about the hailstorm which
we have mentioned, and answered that she did. And, being asked how and in
what way, she answered: I was in my house, and at midday a familiar
came to me and told me to go with a little water on to the field or plain of
Kuppel (for so is it named). And when I asked what he wanted to do with the
water, he said that he wanted to make it rain. So I went out at the town
gate, and found the devil standing under a tree. The judge asked her,
under which tree; and she said, Under that one opposite that tower,
pointing it out. Asked what she did under the tree, she said, The
devil told me to dig a hole and pour the water into it. Asked whether
they say down together, she said, I sat down, but the devil stood
up. Then she was, with what words and in what manner she had stirred
the water; and she answered, I stirred it with my finger, and called
on the name of the devil himself and all the other devils. Again the
judge asked what was done with the water, and she answered: It
disappeared, and the devil took it up into the air. Then she was
asked if she had any associate, and answered: Under another tree
opposite I had a companion (naming the other capture witch, Anna von
Mindelheim), but I do not know what she did. Finally, the bath-woman
was asked how long it was between the taking up of the water the hailstorm;
and she answered: There was just sufficient interval of time to allow
me to get back to my house.
But (and this is remarkable) when on the next day the other witch had at
first been exposed to the very gentlest questions, being suspended hardly
clear of the ground by her thumbs, after she had been set quite free, she
disclosed the whole matter without the slightest discrepancy from what the
other had told; agreeing as to the place, that it was under such a tree and
the other had been under another; as to the method, namely, of stirring
water poured into a hole in the name of the devil and all the devils; and as
to the interval of time, that the hailstorm had come after her devil had
taken the water up into the air and she had returned home. Accordingly, on
the third day they were burned. And the bath-woman was contrite and
confessed, and commended herself to God, saying that she would die with a
willing heart if she could escape the tortures of the devil, and held in her
hand a cross which she kissed. But the other witch scorned her for doing so.
And this one had consorted with an Incubus devil for more than twenty years
with a complete abjuration of the Faith, and had done far more harm than the
former witch to men, cattle and the fruits of the earth, as is shown in the
preserved record of their trial.
These instances must serve, since indeed countless examples of this sort
of mischief could be recounted. But very often men and beasts and
storehouses are struck by lightning by the power of devils; and the cause of
this seems to be more hidden and ambiguous, since it often appears to happen
by Divine permission without the co-operation of any witch. However, it has
been found that witches have freely confessed that they have done such things,
and there are various instances of it, which could be mentioned, in addition
to what has already been said. Therefore it is reasonable to conclude that,
just as easily as they raise hailstorms, so can they cause lightning and
storms at sea; and so no doubt at all remains on these points.
Next: Chapter XVI
Of Three Ways in which Men and Women may be Discovered to be Addicted to Witchcraft: Divided into Three Heads: and First of the Witchcraft of Archers.